CHAPTER OVERVIEW - Crawford



CHAPTER TWO

The Market System and the circular flow

ANSWERS TO END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS

2-1 Contrast how a market system and a command economy try to cope with economic scarcity.

A market system allows for the private ownership of resources and coordinates economic activity through market prices. Participants act in their own self-interest and seek to maximize satisfaction or profit through their own decisions regarding consumption or production. Goods and services are produced and resources are supplied by whoever is willing to do so. The result is competition and widely dispersed economic power.

The command economy is characterized by public ownership of nearly all property resources and economic decisions are made through central planning. The planning board, appointed by the government determines production goals for each enterprise. The division of output between capital and consumer goods is centrally decided based on the board’s long-term priorities.

2-2 How does self-interest help achieve society’s economic goals? Why are there such a wide variety of desired goods and services in a market system? In what way are entrepreneurs and businesses at the helm of the economy, but commanded by consumers?

Acting according to self-interest helps direct resources to their most highly valued uses. Individuals seeking to maximize their own economic well-being best meet that objective by providing goods and services (including resources) that others desire. A market system provides a wide variety of goods and services because individuals are free to express their varied wants, and businesses trying to earn maximum profits will be most successful if they provide what consumers want to buy. Entrepreneurs and businesses are at the helm in that they decide what, how much (and whether or not) to produce, but if they are to be profitable, what they produce must be in accord with what consumers are willing to buy.

2-3 Why is private property, and the protection of property rights, so critical to the success of the market system?

The ownership of private property and the protection of property rights encourages investment, innovation, and, therefore, economic growth. Property rights encourage the maintaining of the property and they facilitate the exchange of the property.

2-4 What are the advantages of using capital in the production process? What is meant by the term “division of labor”? What are the advantages of specialization in the use of human and material resources? Explain why exchange is the necessary consequence of specialization.

Capital enables producers to operate more efficiently and to produce more output.

“Division of labor” means that workers perform those tasks that are best suited to their individual abilities and skills.

The advantages of specialization for workers are that they can choose work according to their natural aptitudes, have the opportunity to perfect those skills, and save time in not having to shift continually from one task to another. Material resources will be developed and adapted for a specific use. On a regional basis, each region will produce those products for which it is best suited. By specializing in its comparative advantage, each region or set of human and material resources is being used to maximize efficiency.

When resources are specialized, they are no longer self-sufficient. To obtain the goods and services one wants, exchange is necessary. Also, specialization will result in a surplus of a specific good being produced. The surplus of one good will be exchanged for the surplus production of other goods.

2-5 What problem does barter entail? Indicate the economic significance of money as a medium of exchange. What is meant by the statement: “We want money only to part with it”?

Barter requires the “double coincidence of wants.” If someone wants something, he/she will have to find someone who wishes to part with that good and at the same time wishes to exchange the good for something that the first party wishes to part with.

With money as a medium of exchange, one knows the purchase price of the item to be purchased and its relative price to other items. Money is a very convenient common denominator, a common measure of value that is also used as a medium of exchange. Money also encourages specialization. Without money, workers and other resources could not be paid except in the output produced. All those who participated in the production of the good would have to collectively exchange it for all the goods and service desired by the resource owners.

Money itself has value only in relation to the resources, goods, and services that can be obtained with it. When people say that they want money, they really mean that they want the things that money can buy. In this sense, money imparts value only when someone parts with it.

2-6 Evaluate and explain the following statements:

a. The market system is a profit-and-loss system.

b. Competition is the disciplinarian of the market economy.

(a) In a market system, producer decisions are motivated by the attempt to earn profits. Those products that enable a firm to earn at least a normal profit will be produced. If the product cannot be produced for a profit—in other words, if losses are involved in production—the capitalist firm will respond by seeking lower cost production methods and may halt the production of goods completely. Because profits and/or losses are the motivation behind the fundamental decisions made in a market system, it could be called a “profit and loss system.”

(b) Competition provides discipline in two ways. First, it forces firms to seek the least-cost production methods or face being driven out of business by their rivals. Second, it prevents successful producers from charging whatever the market will bear. Competition keeps prices at a level where total revenue will just cover the total cost of production including a normal profit, but no more in the long run. If sellers try to charge a price that will earn them economic profits, new firms will enter the industry, increasing supply, and lowering prices until the economic profits are eliminated. Competition is indispensable in this role, because otherwise some other method would have to be found to direct firms to use the least-cost production technique and to charge a price that provides only a normal return. Where competition does not exist, such as in natural monopolies like public utility companies, regulators or publicly owned companies must assume the role of disciplinarian. Experience has shown that this is a difficult process and does not achieve the same results as easily as a competitive market situation.

2-7 In the 1990s thousands of “dot-com” companies emerged with great fanfare to take advantage of the Internet and new information technologies. A few, like Yahoo, eBay, and Amazon, have generally thrived and prospered, but many others struggled and eventually failed. Explain these varied outcomes in terms of how the market system answers the question “What goods and services will be produced?”

The expectation of economic profits lured many firms into the “dot-com” industries. However, because of a lack of information and a market unable to sustain so many firms, many failed to realize even a normal profit and failed. [Technically many of the early dot-coms were not earning economic profits, but their shareholders were reaping huge windfalls from the stock market speculation.] When these new firms found that they could not profitably produce in this industry, they dropped out and the industry declined. The problem was not so much one of consumer sovereignty – consumers demonstrated an interest in these services. The heavy competition of so many firms trying to establish themselves in the market led to prices that were insufficient to cover economic costs. In a few cases, most notably Napster (an internet company that allowed users to download music at no or little cost), government restrictions on activities (copyright infringement in Napster’s case) led to firm failure.

2-8 With current technology, suppose a firm is producing 400 loaves of banana bread daily. Also, assume that the least-cost combination of resources in producing those loaves 5 units of labor, 7 units of land, 2 units of capital, and 1 unit of entrepreneurial ability, selling at prices of $40, $60, $60, and $20, respectively. If the firm can sell these 400 loaves at $2 per unit, will it continue to produce banana bread? If this firm’s situation is typical for the other makers of banana bread, will resources flow to, or away from, this bakery good?

The firm will continue to produce as it is earning economic profits of $40 (Total revenue of $800 minus total cost of $760). If this firm is typical, more resources will flow into the production of banana bread as other firms attempt to capture some of the economic profits.

2-9 Some large hardware stores such as Home Depot boast of carrying as many as 20,000 different products in each store. What motivated the producers of those products to make them and offer them for sale? How did producers decide on the best combinations of resources to use? Who made these resources available, and why? Who decides whether these particular hardware products should continue to get produced and offered for sale?

The quest for profit led firms to produce these goods. Producers looked for and found the least-cost combination of resources in producing their output. Resource suppliers, seeking income, made these resources available. Consumers, through their dollar votes, ultimately decide on what will continue to be produced.

2-10 What is meant by the term “creative destruction”? How does the emergence of MP3 (iPod) technology relate to this idea?

Creative destruction refers to the process by which the creation of new products and production techniques destroys the market positions of firms committed to producing only existing products or using outdated methods. The superior quality, storage capacity, and size of MP3 players is causing a decline in portable CD players, just as DVDs and CDs have replaced cassette tapes, which had previously replaced phonographs (records).

2-11 In a single sentence, describe the meaning of the term “invisible hand.”

Individuals, acting in their self-interest and in response to market signals, will produce those goods and services that maximize their well-being (income or utility) while simultaneously providing the goods and services most desired by society.

2-12 Distinguish between the resource market and product market in the circular flow model. In what way are businesses and households both sellers and buyers in this model? What are the flows in the circular flow model?

The resource markets are where the owners of the resources (the households) sell their resources to the buyers of the resources (businesses). In the product markets, businesses sell the goods and services they have produced to the buyers of the goods and services, the households.

Households (individuals) either own all economic resources directly or own them indirectly through their ownership of business corporations. These households are willing to sell their resources to businesses because attractive prices draw them into specific resource markets. Businesses buy resources because they are necessary for producing goods and services. The interaction of the buyers and sellers establishes the price of each resource.

In the product market, businesses are the sellers and householders are the buyers; their role in the market has been reversed. Each group of economic units both buys and sells.

One flow is the flow of real goods and services (including resource services) and the other flow is the flow of money (money income, consumption expenditures, revenue, production costs).

2-13 What are the major forms of household income? Contrast the wage and salary share to the profit share as to relative size. Distinguish between a durable consumer good and a nondurable consumer good. How does the combined spending on both types of consumer goods compare to the spending on services.

The major forms of household income, from largest to smallest, are wages and salaries (72%), corporate profits (9%), proprietors’ income (9%), interest income (8%), and rents (2%). Wages and salaries generate four times more income than profits (corporate and non-corporate profits combined).

Durable goods (cars, appliances, personal computers) are expected to live three years or longer. Nondurables (food, clothing, gasoline) are expected to last less than three years. Combined spending on goods is less than total spending on services (almost 60% of consumer expenditures).

2-14 What are the three major legal forms of business organization? Which form is the most prevalent in terms of numbers? Which form is dominant in terms of total sales revenues?

The three legal forms of business organizations are: sole proprietorship, partnership, and corporation.

Proprietorships are the most prevalent (72%). They are easy to start (relatively low cost), often don’t require a large customer base to be profitable, and provide maximum freedom for the proprietor to do what she/he thinks best.

Corporations are dominant in terms of total sales revenues (84%). They can access large amounts of money by issuing stocks and bonds; their limited liability is attractive to potential owners; their size and broader ownership base help ensure continuity that helps to build a large customer base and gain cost advantages (a preview for economies of scale).

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